- MC/A/4
- Item
- 1894
Bound in the November 1894 edition of 'The Magazine'. It was designs such as this that earned the Mackintosh group the nickname of 'Spook School'.
Mackintosh, Margaret Macdonald
Bound in the November 1894 edition of 'The Magazine'. It was designs such as this that earned the Mackintosh group the nickname of 'Spook School'.
Mackintosh, Margaret Macdonald
Bound in the Spring 1896 edition of 'The Magazine'. It was designs such as this that earned the Mackintosh group the nickname of 'Spook School'.
Mackintosh, Margaret Macdonald
Poster for a film screening of 'The Passion of Joan of Arc'
Part of Records of The Glasgow School of Art, Glasgow, Scotland
This poster is part of a course project organised by the Visual Communications department. The brief for the project required students to design a poster for a particular film they had been assigned. In this example, student Robert Heatherington has designed a poster for the Carl Dreygar film 'The Passion of Joan of Arc'. Heatherington has created the poster using screen print techniques.
Heatherington, Robert
Papers of Jane Richards and Fiona Jean Paton, students of The Glasgow School of Art
This collection relates to Jane Richards and her granddaughter Fiona Jean Paton who both studied at The Glasgow School of Art.
It includes:
Please note that this material is not yet fully catalogued and therefore some items may not be accessible to researchers.
One item was damaged in the fire in GSA's Mackintosh Building on 23rd May 2014 and was conserved in 2018-19.
Richards, Jane
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 6)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 8)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 9)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 10)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 12)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 17)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 21)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 27)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 34)
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 36)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 8)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 15)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 19)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 31)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 32)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 35)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 37)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 41)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 45)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 46)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 58)
The Magazine: Volume 2 (Page 59)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 3)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 6)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 9)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 10)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 11)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 12)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 18)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 19)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 21)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 24)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 25)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 30)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 33)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 37)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 39)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 47)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 49)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 59)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 67)
The Magazine: Volume 3 (Page 68)
The Building Committee of the Board of Governors of The Glasgow School of Art
Portrait group. Inscribed on frame: "Mr. Charles. R. Mackintosh FRIBA The Architect/Col. R.J.Bennett V.D./Mr. David Barclay FRIBA/Sir Francis Powell, LLD, PRSW/Mr. John Munro FRIBA/Mr. Patrick S. Dunn - Convener/Councillor J. Mollison, MINA/ Mr. Hugh Reid DL/ Sir Wm Bilsland, Bart. LLD, DL/Sir John J. Burnet, RSA, FRIBA, LLD/Mr. John Henderson MA/Sir James Fleming - Chairman of Governors/Mr. John M. Groundwater - secretary/ Mr. Francis H. Newbery CAV OFF, INT, SBC, ARCA - Director, pinxit". When Newbery exhibited this group at the Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts in 1913 it did not include the figure of Mackintosh. In 1914 he painted his large portrait of Mackintosh (collection: Scottish National Portrait Gallery) and his Building Committee portrait group was offered to the Board and accepted. When it was unveiled in 1914 it was seen that he had added Mackintosh's figure, a smaller version of his individual portrait, to the left of the group, and redated the whole canvas 1914. Painting cleaned and relined in 1963 by Mr Harry McLean who discovered the late addition of the figure of Mackintosh.
Newbery, Francis Henry
Letter of congratulations to The Glasgow School of Art from John Byrne, artist
An A4 size letter featuring watercolour paintings commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Glasgow School of Art , 6 January 1995.
Please note that this material is not yet fully catalogued and therefore some items may not be accessible to researchers.
Byrne, John
The Nativity ('And lo the star...')
Bound in the Spring 1896 edition of 'The Magazine'. It was designs such as this that earned the Mackintosh group the nickname of 'Spook School'.
MacNair, Frances Macdonald
The Magazine: Volume 1 (Page 1)